Teen-age pop star Tiffany dropped her petition to emancipate herself from her mother's legal guardianship Thursday, but it is doubtful that she will be returning home anytime soon. According to attorneys for the mother, Janie C. Williams, the only reason the 16-year-old singer tentatively agreed to settle was that Williams threatened to force an expensive trial on the question of whether Tiffany can act as an adult. "Our biggest regret is that the settlement, which Mrs.

Teen-age pop star Tiffany dropped her petition to emancipate herself from her mother's legal guardianship Thursday, but it is doubtful that she will be returning home anytime soon. According to attorneys for the mother, Janie C. Williams, the only reason the 16-year-old singer tentatively agreed to settle was that Williams threatened to force an expensive trial on the question of whether Tiffany can act as an adult. "Our biggest regret is that the settlement, which Mrs.

In the latest action in a seven-week-old legal battle between teen pop music star Tiffany and her mother, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge has removed Janie C. Williams as trustee of her 16-year-old daughter's $100,000 trust fund.

In the latest action in a seven-week-old legal battle between teen pop music star Tiffany and her mother, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge has removed Janie C. Williams as trustee of her 16-year-old daughter's $100,000 trust fund.

Tiffany, the fresh-faced teen idol who skyrocketed to the top of the national pop charts last year, is embroiled in a bitter legal battle to shift control of her career from her mother to herself, and indirectly to her manager. At stake is her share of an estimated $1.5 million in royalties from the 16-year-old's MCA recordings, including her hit album "Tiffany," which has sold more than 4 million copies.